Proposal: Remove the bogus MonadFail instance for ST
Zemyla
zemyla at gmail.com
Tue Mar 20 19:48:54 UTC 2018
To be honest, you could probably do safe throwing and catching in ST by
wrapping a thrown SomeException in some hidden exception type (call it
STException), not exporting that type, and then having the catch command be
like the IO version except it only catches and unwraps STException.
On Mar 20, 2018 01:40, "Jon Purdy" <evincarofautumn at gmail.com> wrote:
> Just to add a couple cents, my informal intuition for “fail” is that I
> should be able to use it to “filter” things in do-notation or a monad
> comprehension:
>
> [x | Right x <- [Right "a", Right "b", Left 3]] :: [String]
> [x | Right x <- Data.Vector.fromList [Right "a", Right "b", Left 3]] ::
> Vector String
> [x | Right x <- Just (Left 3)] :: Maybe String
>
> The old “fail” implementation for Data.Vector used to throw an exception,
> and I nudged Bryan to accept a PR making it return an empty vector, so I
> could use monad comprehensions for vectors with the same expectations as
> list comprehensions. That does suggest MonadPlus as the “real” source of
> the semantics I want.
>
> But there just isn’t always a well-defined thing you can do within a given
> monad with only the type of “fail”.
>
> The fact that it raises an exception for IO is fine by me, because at
> least it can be caught in IO. On the other hand, I’d look at any code that
> actually catches pattern-match failure exceptions as pretty smelly. Still,
> in that context, to me the ideal solution is to also throw an exception in
> ST, as long as some mechanism exists for safely throwing and catching
> exceptions in ST. (I don’t know how hard that would be to add.)
>
>
> On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 9:53 AM, Edward Kmett <ekmett at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> As one data point re: your lens, STM offers a meaningful retry.
>>
>> -Edward
>>
>> On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 3:46 PM, Carter Schonwald <
>> carter.schonwald at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> So this boils down to two concerns
>>>
>>> 1) should st support refutable pattern matches , and this in turn
>>> touches on pure exceptions and totality concerns
>>>
>>> 2) is monad fail actually the monad zero or just support for refutable
>>> patterns , which may sometimes use monad zero for implementation?
>>>
>>> I’m not sure one way or another.
>>>
>>> One lens for this is: how do the arguments for monad fail differ between
>>> ST and STM?
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 8:22 AM Michael Snoyman <michael at snoyman.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I also find your `Point` data type telling, but I think for the
>>>> opposite reason. I think most people would want to avoid letting a pattern
>>>> match silently turn into a bottom value in the `Point` data type.
>>>>
>>>> IMO, what all of this comes down to is the fact that `MonadFail` is
>>>> being used in this thread for two purposes:
>>>>
>>>> 1. By you to be the general purpose zero class
>>>> 2. By (I think) everyone else to be the class that allows you to do
>>>> refutable pattern matches
>>>>
>>>> Personally, I think `fail :: String -> m a` is a bad type for a general
>>>> purpose zero class; either MonadZero, or a type class using `Exception`
>>>> like `MonadThrow` in `exceptions, would be better. And regardless, I don't
>>>> think we should be encouraging further usage of bottom values, even if the
>>>> usage of a bottom is in fact law abiding.
>>>>
>>>> On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 10:34 AM, Edward Kmett <ekmett at gmail.com>
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Mar 15, 2018, at 9:13 AM, Michael Snoyman <michael at snoyman.com>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> If the concern is a lack of ability to have the properly sequenced
>>>>> exception throwing, I would argue that the correct response is to provide a
>>>>> monomorphic `failST :: String -> ST s a` function to be explicit about the
>>>>> purpose. I'd personally go farther and make the function `throwST ::
>>>>> Exception e => e -> ST s a`.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I definitely agree here.
>>>>>
>>>>> While it's true that `MonadFail (ST s)` obeys the laws, the point here
>>>>> is about the extra functionality provided by `MonadFail`, namely around
>>>>> pattern matching. I think the question can be boiled down to: do we want to
>>>>> make it easy to call `fail` when writing code inside `ST`?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> My point was more that this is rather distinct from the other cases
>>>>> mentioned in that it is a true legal instance, enabling things like a
>>>>> fail-based guard to actually protect against subsequent code in ST
>>>>> executing.
>>>>>
>>>>> I do find it telling that we can get into a similar situation
>>>>> completely without effects with
>>>>>
>>>>> data Point a = Point a
>>>>>
>>>>> ...
>>>>>
>>>>> instance Monad Point where
>>>>> return = Point
>>>>> Point a >>= f = f a
>>>>>
>>>>> instance MonadFail Point where
>>>>> fail = error
>>>>>
>>>>> the extra "point" added by using data rather than newtype and the
>>>>> strict pattern match in >>= plumbs the error out in the same fashion as ST
>>>>> here.
>>>>>
>>>>> I find the ability to explicitly construct bottoms at the right time
>>>>> to guard subsequent operations in those monads to be a piece of vocabulary
>>>>> that would be otherwise missing if we retroactively tried to impose some
>>>>> additional handling laws that aren't required by having a cancellative zero.
>>>>>
>>>>> On Thu, Mar 15, 2018 at 10:00 AM, Edward Kmett <ekmett at gmail.com>
>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm a bit less convinced about the benefits removing the instance for
>>>>>> MonadFail (ST s).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Playing devil's advocate here:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Recall that throwIO is distinct from throw for a good reason, as it
>>>>>> ensures that the throwing occurs at the right step in the sequence of binds.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The `fail` instance for ST can similarly be viewed as a perfectly
>>>>>> reasonable monotone function affecting the result of runST :: (forall s. ST
>>>>>> s a) -> a, which produces an `a` that is the appropriate bottom at the
>>>>>> right time when you take a certain branch in the ST calculation. This is
>>>>>> rather different than Identity, as you can't just ape this behavior by
>>>>>> calling 'error' instead as you need the smarter call.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> To achieve that functionality today _without_ fail, you need to reach
>>>>>> for unsafe operations `unsafeIOtoST . failIO` it to get the correct
>>>>>> semantics, which is a damn sight messier and scarier and importantly
>>>>>> removing the instance means this can't be something that is done by just
>>>>>> delegating to base monad transformer 'fail' as would be done through
>>>>>> something like `StateT s (ST s')`. This seems to create a false tension
>>>>>> between doing the most defined thing and doing the thing I want with a
>>>>>> stronger constraint, which I usually take as a sign that the building
>>>>>> blocks are wrong.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Removing this instance comes at a real cost in terms of generality of
>>>>>> code that uses `MonadFail`: It does pass the left zero law!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Overall, I'm -1, as I'm actually leaning against the removal of the
>>>>>> instance personally on the grounds above.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> -Edward
>>>>>>
>>>>>> On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 3:31 PM, Michael Snoyman <michael at snoyman.com
>>>>>> > wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> One possible "well behaved" intuition could be "cannot result in an
>>>>>>> exception thrown from pure code without usage of unsafe functions." By this
>>>>>>> definition:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> * Maybe's fail is well behaved: using `fail "foo"` results in a
>>>>>>> total Nothing value
>>>>>>> * List's: same thing, but with an empty list
>>>>>>> * IO: runtime exception, but the exception is _not_ in pure code,
>>>>>>> but rather from within IO, where exceptions are always to be expected
>>>>>>> * ST: `runST (fail "foo")` results in a pure value which, when
>>>>>>> evaluated, throws a runtime exception, breaking the well behaved definition
>>>>>>> * Identity: `Identity (fail "foo")` can only be a pure value which
>>>>>>> throws an exception, and is therefore not well behaved
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Note that I added the requirement of "without usage of unsafe
>>>>>>> functions," since `unsafePerformIO (fail "foo")` can result in a pure
>>>>>>> bottom value.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 4:25 PM, Ryan Scott <ryan.gl.scott at gmail.com
>>>>>>> > wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Thanks, that makes more sense. I'm inclined to agree that MonadFail
>>>>>>>> instances should fail in a "well-behaved" way. (I wish I knew how to
>>>>>>>> make the phrase "well-behaved" more formal, but I don't.) It might
>>>>>>>> be
>>>>>>>> worth adding this intuition to the Haddocks for MonadFail.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> That being said, one thing to consider before removing this instance
>>>>>>>> is that there will be some breakage. Ben Gamari added this instance
>>>>>>>> in
>>>>>>>> [1] because apparently the regex-tdfa package needed it. Other than
>>>>>>>> that, though, I don't have any real objections to removing this
>>>>>>>> instance.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Ryan S.
>>>>>>>> -----
>>>>>>>> [1] https://phabricator.haskell.org/D3982
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 9:58 AM, David Feuer <david.feuer at gmail.com>
>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>> > I expect a MonadFail instance to have a well-behaved notion of
>>>>>>>> failure
>>>>>>>> > within the monad. An exception from "pure" code (which is what ST
>>>>>>>> > simulates) is not that. On the other hand, perhaps you're right
>>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>>> > the instance should be removed for IO as well; I don't have as
>>>>>>>> strong
>>>>>>>> > a sense of revulsion, but maybe users should be forced to be
>>>>>>>> explicit
>>>>>>>> > with throwIO.
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> > On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 9:46 AM, Ryan Scott <
>>>>>>>> ryan.gl.scott at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> >> OK. You used the phrase "utterly contrary to the purpose of
>>>>>>>> >> MonadFail", so I'm trying to figure out exactly what you mean
>>>>>>>> here.
>>>>>>>> >> Prima facie, the purpose of MonadFail (at least, as explained in
>>>>>>>> its
>>>>>>>> >> Haddocks) is to provide a type class–directed way of desugaring
>>>>>>>> >> partial pattern matches in do-notation. With this in mind, the
>>>>>>>> current
>>>>>>>> >> MonadFail instance for ST doesn't seem too offensive.
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> However, I think you have some additional property in mind that
>>>>>>>> you
>>>>>>>> >> feel the MonadFail ST instance runs afoul of. Do you mind
>>>>>>>> explaining
>>>>>>>> >> in further detail what this is? (I'm not trying to be snarky
>>>>>>>> here—I
>>>>>>>> >> genuinely don't know what you're getting at.)
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> Ryan S.
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 9:41 AM, David Feuer <
>>>>>>>> david.feuer at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> >>> I am not. I think that instance is fairly legitimate, as it
>>>>>>>> raises an
>>>>>>>> >>> IO exception that can be caught in IO. IO's Alternative
>>>>>>>> instance is a
>>>>>>>> >>> bit shadier, but that's not a topic for this proposal either.
>>>>>>>> ST is an
>>>>>>>> >>> entirely different story, and I'm sorry I accidentally mixed it
>>>>>>>> in.
>>>>>>>> >>>
>>>>>>>> >>> On Wed, Mar 14, 2018 at 9:05 AM, Ryan Scott <
>>>>>>>> ryan.gl.scott at gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> >>>> It's worth noting that the MonadFail instance for IO [1] also
>>>>>>>> simply throws
>>>>>>>> >>>> an error (by way of failIO). Are you proposing we remove this
>>>>>>>> instance as
>>>>>>>> >>>> well?
>>>>>>>> >>>>
>>>>>>>> >>>> Ryan S.
>>>>>>>> >>>> -----
>>>>>>>> >>>> [1]
>>>>>>>> >>>> http://git.haskell.org/ghc.git/blob/cb6d8589c83247ec96d5faa8
>>>>>>>> 2df3e93f419bbfe0:/libraries/base/Control/Monad/Fail.hs#l80
>>>>>>>> >>>>
>>>>>>>> >>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>>>>>
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>>>>>>
>>>>>
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